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Two of the region’s top carriers have warned that demand for flights is being weighed down by extremist attacks, shocks like Britain’s vote to leave the European Union, Turkey’s attempted military coup, strikes and severe weather.

“More recently currency volatility as a result of the U.K.’s referendum decision to leave the EU as well as the recent events in Turkey and Nice continue to impact consumer confidence,” easyJet CEO Carolyn McCall said in a statement. Shares in the company fell 5.3 percent to 1,067 pence in London.

The attack in the French seaside city of Nice, which left 84 dead when an extremist drove a truck through a crowd gathered for a national holiday celebration, was the third major attack to hit France since early last year.

EasyJet said it nevertheless managed to increase the number of passengers it carried, by almost 6 percent, but that seemed due to incentives such as discounting, as the revenue per seat fell almost 8 percent.

As a result of the heightened uncertainties, Lufthansa said it had to lower its earnings forecast for this year. It said its adjusted earnings before interest and tax would be below the previous year’s, against a previous target of slightly above that level. For the first six months of 2016, that measure of profits was 529 million euros.

The weaker earnings come even as the price of oil, a major cost factor for airlines, is down compared with last year.

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